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Office of Undergraduate Research We are here to help Come by and see us if you have any questions or need help. Thomas Kvale (Director) Office: SL2140 Phone: Larry Connin (Associate Director) Office: SL1120 Phone: Jamie Teeple (Grad. Assistant) Office: SL3010 Phone:

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OURUT Research Programs Academic Year Research Program: AYRP First Year Summer Research Experience: FYSRE Research Abroad Undergraduate Summer Research & Creative Activity Program: USRCAP UT-City of Toledo Internship Program: TolInterns Work-Study Research Program: WSRP All of the above programs require proposals, written by students (and edited by proposed faculty mentors).

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Proposal Writing Techniques The best way to become involved in research is for you, the student, to be actively involved from the very beginnings of research -- the proposal! The way a proposal is crafted can make the difference between receiving funding and being turned down for funding.

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Proposal Writing Techniques Parts of a Proposal: Abstract Introduction Main Body References Additional Parts of a Proposal: Academic Statement Letter of Support

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Proposal Writing Techniques The first impression (abstract or first page) is extremely important! Many reviewers will form an impression (either positive or negative) within this part of the proposal. Parts of a Proposal: The Abstract It should be concise!! -- 1 or two paragraphs *AND* at most half a page.

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Proposal Writing Techniques The abstract should: set the goals of the project; how this project is anticipated to advance current understanding. Parts of a Proposal: The Abstract The National Science Foundation required components of the abstract: 1.Outline the Intellectual Merit of the project; 2.Describe how this project may Impact the Broader Community.

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Proposal Writing Techniques The Introduction is also part of the first impression of the proposal. The Introduction should: provide background of the project; set the goals of the project; how it will be undertaken, and; how it fits in/advances current understanding. Parts of a Proposal: The Introduction It should be concise!! -- 1 or two paragraphs *AND*at most one page.

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Proposal Writing Techniques Parts of a Proposal: The Main Body usually a maximum of 15 pages for State and Federal programs, or a maximum of 7 pages for OUR-UT programs The main body is where you present the details of your project. This is the “meat and potatoes” of your proposal. Explain the methodology and all specific terms such that a reader not in that area could understand your project. Any graphs and/or figures are included here. It should be thorough, but stay within the page limits (Introduction through Summary/Conclusion),

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Proposal Writing Techniques Parts of a Proposal: The References Proper citations are a necessary component to ETHICAL conduct of research. You are building upon or advancing the field by doing research or creation of art/literature. As such, you need to credit the work of others that have an impact on your work. Cite the relevant works and/or cite review articles in the field. The reference section is not counted in the proposal page limit for OUR-UT programs.

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Proposal Writing Techniques Here are some tips for you to write a good proposal and avoid some of the pitfalls that are contained in poorly-written proposals. Remember that research by its very nature seeks to go beyond the individual and be universal. The clearer you can express the following three points, the better chances your project will be ranked high: the Intellectual Merit of the project; the Broader Community Impact. the Impact on Your Academic Program.

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Proposal Writing Techniques Your project is, in most cases, a team effort between you and your faculty mentor. Explain the relationship of your project to your faculty mentor’s research program. If your research project is completely distinct from your faculty mentor’s research, it is very important to explain the role your faculty mentor will play on your project. Explain the relationship

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Proposal Writing Techniques Your faculty mentor should guide you in the preparation of your proposal and edit the final version. Your proposal should be as professional as you can make it at the level that you understand the research material. A proposal that gives the impression that it has been “cut-and-pasted” from your faculty mentor’s research papers generally is rated lower than one that gives the impression that you wrote it. You are the primary author of the proposal.

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Proposal Writing Techniques If the guidelines say 3-7 pages, don’t turn in proposals that are less than -- or more than -- that length. Make sure to turn in ALL required parts of the proposal. Incomplete proposals missing parts will not be reviewed in most cases. Don’t adjust the main text font size and/or margins beyond what is readable (typically, point font) and/or margins beyond standard and/or posted lengths (typically, 3/4” - 1”) to meet the page limit size. Also be mindful of graphs and their readability. Observe the posted proposal guidelines!!!

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Proposal Writing Techniques Meet the deadlines!!!!! If your proposal arrives late to OUR-UT office, it may or may not be accepted. Deadlines are called DEADlines for a reason!! Internet malfunction is not an acceptable excuse for a late proposal. FYSRE, TolInterns, and USRCAP Proposal Deadline: February 24, 2012

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Proposal Writing Techniques Spelling, spelling, spelling..... (& grammar) Remember that your proposal conveys to the reviewer your professionalism and presentation. An excellent project can be judged low if the presentation is poor. Use your word processor’s spell check and grammar check, but don’t depend on them alone. For example, “two”, “to”, and “too” are all perfectly spelled American-English words that have completely different meanings. Other examples include: there/their; affect/effect; etc.

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Proposal Writing Techniques The reviewers are highly educated individuals, conducting research in many diverse areas. As such, they may not be in your field of research and may not know a priori the importance of an x-ray diffractometer, Caenorhabditis elegans, George Gershwin, a pentameter, Neo-Platonism, or whatever is to your project. Be sure to explain to the general reader the significance of any specialized standards, procedures, and/or equipment. Define all technical terms.

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Proposal Writing Techniques Research by its very nature seeks to go beyond the individual and be universal. If, for instance, you want to study how Scandinavian women are portrayed in seventh century art, you need to define any subjective measures that you will use in how you categorize (positively, neutral, or negatively) the objects. These subjective measures should be consistent with commonly accepted standards. Provide references and/or definitions for the metrics you use. Qualitative versus quantitative.

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Special Proposal Writing Techniques creative works All research projects require a background to build upon, even if you are proposing a creative work. Describe your methodology carefully and how you will be using your research to create an artistic work. It is understood that your inspiration may happen at unanticipated times, but how you describe your approach may be the difference between being funded or not. Remember that your proposal will be reviewed by people in many different disciplines. Present your project carefully.

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Special Proposal Writing Techniques Business research project Present your project carefully. The Outline of a Business Research Proposal The Title, Abstract, References (in APA style format), Budget, and Conclusion sections are similar to the other disciplines. The Introduction situates the research subject within a larger business context. The Main Body contains two parts: The Literature Review is the core section of the business research proposal; it provides justification for the future research as well as for the effort the writer is contributing to the subject area. The Literature review has to prove that there is a gap in either theory or business practice and that the proposed research will eliminate this gap. The Methods section is an outline of all the activities that the writer is planning to perform in the pursuit of his/her research goals. The focus of this section is on the details: the timeframe for each activity, the potential sample group, how data will be collected/analyzed.

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Special Proposal Writing Techniques Toledo Internship Modified Application procedure since the project is usually not known a priori. Ideal for students pursuing careers in public service w/majors in political science, sociology, communication, social work, geography & planning, law & social thought, criminal justice, or business. Select 3 possible city departments you would like to work at during the summer. Your Academic Statement becomes the main part of your submitted proposal. After 3 weeks, submit a project description in the standard proposal format.

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Proposal Writing Techniques Internal Review Board (IRB) approvals are needed for studies that involve human subjects (including surveys), or IACUC approvals for experimental animals. Other offices control chemicals, biological agents, radiation, etc. You and/or your faculty mentor must seek approval if your research involves any of these elements. Approvals are processed through the UT Office of Research Administration (UH2300). COMPLIANCE Issues!!! Approval must be granted *before* you start your research. No exceptions may be made for approval after the fact.

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Proposal Writing Techniques Fill out the Budget and Budget Justification pages according to the guidelines of the program you to which are applying. Some programs contain stipends, some do not. For supplies, list enough information that the reviewers can make a determination if your requested budget is justified. Remember that the programs administered through the OUR-UT office are primarily funded by tax dollars and have certain restrictions that limit what can be funded. Budget!!

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Proposal Writing Techniques Writing and editing by both you and your faculty mentor takes time -- in many cases, more time than you originally estimate. Take your first time estimate and multiply it by  ( ) to get a better estimate of start- to-finish time duration for crafting a proposal. NOW IS THE TIME TO START WRITING!!!

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Office of Undergraduate Research FYSRE, TolInterns, and USRCAP Proposal Deadline: February 24, 2012 We are here to help Come by and see us if you have any questions or need help. Thomas Kvale (Director) Larry Connin (Associate Director) Office: SL2140 Office: SL1120 Phone: Phone: Jamie Teeple (Graduate Assistant) Office: SL3010 Phone: